Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre

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Active until
  
1974

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Dandelion S 63752 Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Rare Record

Years active
  
1968–1971 (as P.E.Magic Theatre)1972–1974 (as Principal Edwards)

Past members
  
Principal Edwards Magic Theatre:Root CartwrightBelinda "Bindy" BourquinDavid JonesLyn EdwardsTerry BuddRoger SwallowJeremy EnsorJoe ReadMartin StellmanVivienne McAuliffeEva DarlowMonica NettlesJohn McMahon HillGillian HadleyLes AdeyMichael "Harry" HousmanChris RuncimanPrincipal Edwards:Root CartwrightBelinda "Bindy" BourquinDavid JonesGeoff NichollsRichard JonesNick Pallett

Origin
  
Albums
  
The Asmoto Running Band, Soundtrack, Soundtrack/The Asmoto Running

Genres
  
Psychedelic rock, Psychedelic folk

Similar
  
Bridget St John, Medicine Head, Sam Apple Pie, Stack Waddy, Natural Acoustic Band

Principal edwards magic theatre the asmoto running band 1971 full album


Principal Edwards Magic Theatre was an English performance art collective in the United Kingdom made up of about 14 musicians, poets, dancers, and sound and lighting technicians. It existed between 1968 and 1971, after which core members formed a more conventional rock band under the shortened name Principal Edwards.

Contents

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Som Mutantequot Principal Edwards Magic Theater

Formation

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre httpsimgdiscogscomPvRzn1T6yGW8fEFVuwtxH4ya8

The collective was formed by students at the University of Exeter who had originally intended producing an arts magazine. The initial musicians were Root Cartwright (guitar, mandolin, songwriter), Belinda "Bindy" Bourquin (violin, keyboards, recorder), David Jones (vocals, percussion), Jeremy Ensor (bass), Martin Stellman (vocals), Lyn Edwards (drums), and Vivienne McAuliffe (vocals). Dancers included Gillian Hadley (choreographer), John McMahon Hill, Eva Darlow and Monica Nettles, while Les Adey, Harry Housman and Chris Runciman were responsible for sound, lighting, props and effects. The name was taken from the Magic Theatre referenced in Herman Hesse's novel Steppenwolf, and from Principal Thomas Charles Edwards, a theologian who was the first Principal of the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth and an ancestor of Lyn Edwards. According to Cartwright, the name had "no religious overtones, we just thought [it] sounded neat."

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre, 1968–71

Their first public performance was at an event called "Dance of Words" organised by students in Portsmouth and hosted by John Peel in May 1968, which also featured Fairport Convention, Free, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Alexis Korner, and poets Brian Patten and Michael Horowitz. They were signed by Korner's management team and, with Peel's active support, performed at similar events and gigs in London and elsewhere, sharing bills with Pink Floyd, The Fugs, Family, Ten Years After and others. The group were the first to be signed to Peel's Dandelion Records – though the label's co-founder Clive Selwood later described them as "the most pretentious act I have ever come across", and Peel's radio producer John Walters described them as "incorporating all kinds of arty-farty nonsense" – and performed at the first Bath Festival of Blues in June 1969.

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Pictureslt

They released their first single, "Ballad (of the Big Girl Now and a Mere Boy)", in July 1969, followed the next month by their first album, Soundtrack, produced by Peel and the band, and so called because music was only one aspect of their performance, which also incorporated dance, lighting and poetry. Most of the songs were composed by Cartwright, with lyrical contributions by other band members and associates. According to reviewer Pete Frame of Zigzag magazine, the album was "brimming with invention: time changes, unusual chord changes, interesting lyrics...". The sometimes whimsical, sometimes epic (verging on progressive rock) writing style of Cartwright was paired with the eclectic lyrical contributions of David Jones, Gillian Hadley and Monica Nettles, and was performed by vocalist Vivienne McAuliffe. The violin and recorders of Bindy Bourquin were another key element of the group's trademark sound. Lyn Edwards, originally on bongos, took over on the drumkit.

Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Pictureslt

With their education conflicting with their musical activities, members left their studies at Exeter and moved together into a large farmhouse near Kettering, Northamptonshire to rehearse and as a base for their extensive touring, often as a support act for more established bands. During this time, the group opened for several acts including Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, and Fleetwood Mac. In 1970 they recorded their second album, The Asmoto Running Band, produced by Nick Mason of Pink Floyd, and named for an in-joke about a roadie's poorly-written comment that they should aspire to being "a smooth running band". It was released by Dandelion in January 1971; according to Cartwright, the first side of the LP was "a green concept album, in a tongue-in-cheek sort of way."

They won a residency at the Hampstead Theatre Club in London, but there were differences over future direction. The original collective split up in December 1971, according to Cartwright as a result of "serious tensions between fringe theatre and rock priority, together with business hassles."

Principal Edwards, 1972–74

In early 1972, the core trio of Root Cartwright, Belinda Bourquin and David Jones formed a new more rock-oriented band, with the abbreviated name of Principal Edwards. They were joined by musicians Richard Jones (bass, previously of the Climax Blues Band), Nick Pallett (guitar, vocals), and Geoff Nicholls (drums). Over the next three years they mounted three complete stage musicals touring around the country – King of Changes; Stone Age Sam; and The Glass White Gangster. They were managed by Miles Copeland, and signed to Deram Records, who released their album Round One, again produced by Nick Mason, in 1974. However, the album was not a commercial success. After recording some more material, not released at the time but issued by Cherry Red Records in 2008 as The Devon Tapes, the band broke up.

Life after Principal Edwards

Since the 1970s, members' fortunes have varied greatly. Singer Martin Stellman directed Denzel Washington in For Queen and Country; David Jones ran a community centre; and Root Cartwright became a gardener and photographic artist. Bindy Bourquin and Richard Jones married and both went into teaching. Jones plays in two bands: The Climax Ceilidh Band and Meridian. Nick Pallet played Twang on Animal Kwackers, a British children's programme similar to The Banana Splits.

Lyn Edwards worked extensively in theatre, as well as children's television (Play School) and BBC radio. He is currently teaching drums in schools and playing in several bands.

Jeremy Ensor toured (as sound engineer/tour manager) with Deep Purple, Fleetwood Mac, and Greenslade (co-producing two of their LPs) and then worked as an A&R man for CBS and Phonogram Records signing, amongst others, Judas Priest and Graham Bonnett. He currently lives in north London and is an IT consultant.

Chris Runciman is still on the road as a tour manager/production manager, and sound and lights engineer for Jackson Browne, Steve Earle, and James Taylor. In recent years he had been working as a technical consultant to Sir George Martin on the island of Montserrat.

Les Adey was the lighting technician for Genesis.

Serious illness and breakdowns have befallen some of the other former members. Dancer John McMahon Hill and Vivienne McAuliffe are both deceased.

As Principal Edwards Magic Theatre

  • "Ballad (Of The Big Girl Now And A Mere Boy)" / "Lament For The Earth" (1969) Single, Dandelion Records
  • Soundtrack (1969) LP, Dandelion Records
  • The Asmoto Running Band (1971) LP, Dandelion Records
  • Soundtrack / The Asmoto Running Band (1994) CD, See For Miles Records
  • Soundtrack (2006) CD, Cherry Red Records
  • The Asmoto Running Band (2006) CD, Cherry Red Records
  • As Principal Edwards

  • Round One (1974) LP, Deram
  • "Captain Lifeboy" / "Nothing" (1973) single, Deram
  • "Weekdaze" / "The Whizzmore Kid" (1973) single, Deram
  • Other song titles

  • "The Kettering Song"
  • "Enigmatic Insomniac Machine"
  • "The Death of Don Quixote"
  • "Freef(R')All"
  • "Weirdsong of Breaking Through at Last"
  • Songs

    The Asmoto Running BandThe Asmoto Running Band · 1971
    The Kettering SongThe Asmoto Running Band · 1971
    Weirdsong of Breaking Through at LastThe Asmoto Running Band · 1971

    References

    Principal Edwards Magic Theatre Wikipedia